Get your head in the game
Mastering the mental aspect of sport
Cole Guenter
The Sheaf (University of Saskatchewan)
SASKATOON (CUP) — Athletes and coaches spend a lot of time working on physical, technical and strategic skills in a particular sport. But is that enough? What about the mental aspect of the game? How important is it for athletes to prepare their psychological mindset?
According to Tom Graham, clinical research coordinator with the University of Saskatchewan’s psychiatry department, training the mind for sport is extremely beneficial.
“The mental part is huge because it can either unleash or derail those technical, tactical and physical preparations that we spend so much time on,” Graham said.
Here are four key areas Dr. Graham addresses to help athletes hone their psychological sport skills.
Adherence to physical training
As a former Olympic athlete, Graham knows that while elite athletes are expected to follow a physical training program, not everyone does. When an athlete enters competition, their mental preparedness for the event depends, in part, on the quality of their physical training.
Failure to reach one’s physical goals and to follow a training program, however, can impact an athlete’s mindset, transforming what should be an area of confidence into an area of worry, concern and doubt.
“There is something inside us that says, ‘I was supposed to get this much stronger, I was supposed to adhere to my program [but] I didn’t do it,’ ” Graham said. “Subsequently, the athlete is entering competition with a question mark on their forehead, where they should be entering it, had they done everything, with an exclamation mark.”
The ideal performance state
Every athlete uses mental tactics to get themselves ready for sports competitions.
How athletes feel before they compete has a tremendous impact on how they perform. Thus, when athletes perform exceptionally well, it is important to recall how they felt prior to the event.
Graham calls this pre-competitive mindset associated with exceptional performances the “ideal performance state.”
“The mental part is huge because it can either unleash or derail those technical, tactical and physical preparations that we spend so much time on.” – Tom Graham
Psychological skills like relaxation and visualization are often used by athletes, and these skills are far more effective when directed towards a targeted state of mind.
“You can relax and visualize but you may end up anywhere,” says Graham.
“The value in identifying your ideal pre-competitive mindset is that now those relaxation and visualization skills have a destination.”
Combating self-doubt
Once an athlete can identify and target their ideal performance state, one of the issues they must overcome is preventing self-doubt from creeping into their psychological preparation.
“The worries, concerns, doubts and fears are really the major monkey wrench issues that prevent achieving an ideal performance state or positive frame of mind before competition,” Graham said.
Negative thoughts are common and almost all athletes experience them at some time or another. Self-doubt makes athletes feel anxious about aspects of their game that they have been struggling with and it often leads to delayed decision-making in competition.
The key to conquering self-doubt and preventing it from affecting performance is to identify the areas that cause worry, concern or doubt during competition. Then ask “what can I do about it?” Answering this question provides the athlete with a strategy to improve their performance.
“Contrary to popular belief, athletes play better when they think less,” Graham said. “Take the complicated strategy and simplify it as much as possible. Take the five points or 10 points in a complicated competition plan and boil them down to priorities.”
Season-long preparation for the big game
Too often, athletes expect career-best performances at important end-of-year competitions such as playoffs, but do little during the course of the season to make that happen.
“Consequently, they do nothing to prepare and, guess what, they get uncomfortably nervous at the end of the year,” Graham explains.
Competitive simulation is a method used to prepare for important competition. This involves using the progression from early season training to tournament competition to prepare for the most important competition at the end of the season.
As the season progresses, they have several exposures to playoff pressure and are better able to manage the most important events at the end of the season.
“We want to perform with abandon in playoffs. To do this, we have to apply some competitive simulation to the flow of our season,” said Graham.
Some athletes won’t put in the training time to try extra steps, like improving their mental game, until just before the most important competition of their careers. But top athletes prepare all season in order to be in the right frame of mind when the stakes are the highest.
Photo courtesy of Samantha Braun/The Sheaf